Kevin Featherstone
External conditionality and the debt crisis: the ‘Troika’ and public administration reform in Greece Article (Accepted version) (Refereed)
Original citation: Featherstone, Kevin (2015) External conditionality and the debt crisis: the ‘Troika’ and public administration reform in Greece. Journal of European Public Policy, 22 (3). pp. 295-314. ISSN 1350-1763
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13501763.2014.955123
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Cover Page
Kevin Featherstone
European Institute, London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, London
WC2A 2AE, U.K. Tel.: +44 (0)20 7955 6066. Email: [email protected].
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Biographical Note:
Kevin Featherstone is Eleftherios Venizelos Professor of Contemporary Greek Studies and Professor
of European Politics at the London School of Economics and Political Science, where he is also
Director of its Hellenic Observatory.
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Title page
External conditionality and the debt crisis: the ‘Troika’ and public
administration reform in Greece
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ABSTRACT Leveraging domestic reform via external conditionality has become
crucial to the rescues of European Union member states in the context of the euro-
zone crisis. The paper examines a critical case – Greece – and a problematic sector,
reform of the central state administration to assess the impact of conditionality. Its
empirical analysis presents new data on the trends in reform activity before and
during Greece’s debt crisis in order to compare the impact of the conditionality set
by the ‘Troika’; and, it examines the content and paradigmatic frames of the reforms
pursued over time, to assess the extent of a break with the inherited domestic
model. It highlights the contrast between aggregate activity and the substance of
reform in sensitive areas. It attributes reform failures to the crafting of the
conditionality strategy and to conflicting domestic interests, administrative
traditions and cultural norms. The case highlights key challenges for the EU in its
handling of the diversity of administrative systems across the euro-zone, an agenda
neglected at Maastricht.
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KEYWORDS Conditionality; debt crisis; administrative reform; Greece; Troika;
cultural norms.
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INTRODUCTION
Leveraging domestic reform via external conditionality has been a core instrument of the
European Union’s (EU) system of governance over recent cases of the accession of new
member states. The ‘euro-crisis’ extended this strategy into a new, unprecedented phase as
the EU combined with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to offer Greece a loan tied to
tough conditions in May 2010 to cover its sovereign debt. The EU was obliged to repeat the
strategy with other member governments as the debt crisis enveloped Ireland, Portugal,
Spain and Cyprus. This is a new context for a conditionality strategy with major implications
– in both the short and long-term - at both the European and domestic levels. The strategy
tests the effectiveness of EU instruments and incentives in the face of high domestic
adaptation costs in the short-term.
This paper examines the case of Greece and the impact of external conditionality on the
reform of its state administration. It assesses the interactions not only in terms of the
interests and incentives at play, but also with respect to the divergences of ideational and
cultural frames that envelop them. In doing so, it draws on the models of conditionality
developed in relation to central Europe by Schimmelfennig and Sedelmeier (2004). It
contrasts the pre-crisis and crisis periods to assess the effectiveness of the conditionality
and it utilises both quantitative and qualitative data, as well as elite interviews, to do so.
The Greek crisis required a bold new step from the EU. In order to circumvent the ‘no bail
out’ rule of the Maastricht Treaty, a rescue loan was extended to Greece in May 2010 with
funding from other EU governments of €110billion (rather than the euro-zone institutions
themselves) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) of €30billion. With the loan came a
Memorandum detailing the conditions to be met to justify continued issuance of the
funding over quarterly instalments, as monitored by a team of ‘Troika’ officials (drawn from
the EU Commission, the European Central Bank, and the IMF). The supervision of the Troika
was reinforced by a second bail-out for Greece (finalised in March 2012), involving a major
‘haircut’ on foreign private creditors. Never before had the EU taken on such close
supervisory responsibilities for one of its member-states. This was extended with the
creation of an ‘EU Taskforce for Greece’ by the EU Commission (in August 2011) to offer
support for domestic institutional reforms designed to improve the receipt and effective use
of EU funding. The closest parallel was, perhaps, the pre-accession monitoring of the states
entering the EU in 2004 via the EU Commission’s annual ‘progress reports’ for each
applicant, though the cases have significant differences as we shall see later.
In any event, the Greek setting represented a ‘least likely’ case’ for external conditionality
stimulating domestic reform (Flyvbjerg, 2006). The dysfunctionalities of the Greek public
administration have long been noted (e.g. Flogaitis, 1987; Makrydemetres and
Michalopoulos, 2000; Sotiropoulos, 1996; Dimitrakopoulos, 2001; Spanou and Sotiropoulos,
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2011). The ‘party-state’ has involved clientelistic appointments across the public sector and
this has constrained the political will to reform. Moreover, the systemic capability to reform
has been weak. A comparison of the reform capacity found in all OECD states, conducted by
the Bertelsmann Stiftung before the crisis, had considered the efficacy of state institutions
and the wider political system to adapt and deliver reform. Of the 31 states compared,
Greece was ranked last in 2009 on its ‘management index’, indicating a very low capacity on
the part of the government executive (Bertelsmann Siftung, 2011). Subsequently, the
regular iterations of the Troika’s monitoring – and its consequences for Greece’s ability to
cover its public debts - have produced an exceptional arena for political bargaining and
calculation (Zahariadis, 2013). The Troika quickly established an office for itself in Athens,
but it has been the headline-grabbing visits of its heads each quarter that have produced
the ‘eyeball to eyeball’ showdowns with government ministers. The Head of the EU
Taskforce for Greece was described as a ‘pro-consul’ by Alexis Tsipras, the increasingly
popular opposition leader, for example, and others stoked-up anti-German caricatures.
Intra-governmental disagreements – exacerbated by the formation of a three-party coalition
in June 2012 – that prevented agreement with the Troika had to be overcome. Difficult
compromises were reached, as governing parties fractured and saw their support ebb away
and that of the opposition increase significantly. Moreover, stories were commonplace in
Athens of young Troika officials confronting senior government ministers abrasively, venting
their frustrations and with little heed to protocol. The clash of cultures was stark, at times:
the EU had stumbled into a position of which it had no prior experience and, given the
political protests, left it somewhat vulnerable.
This paper examines this sensitive area of contention – administrative reform – to chart
reform trends and content, from 2007 to 2013. Empirically, it considers:
The level and extent of reform activity under the ‘normal’ (pre-crisis) conditions of
domestic politics and then with the external constraint.
o This will highlight trends in reform and the extent to which the ‘crisis
opportunity’ has been exploited.
The content and paradigmatic frames of the administrative reforms pursued.
o Is there a shift in the reform trajectory after the crisis erupted, suggesting a
break with the established path? If so, what administrative steer or model is
being promoted under the terms of the bail-out?
The analysis of these two distinct dimensions will enable a better understanding of the
effects of external conditionality.
CONCEPTUAL FRAME
The notion of the external empowerment of domestic actors arising from EU commitments
and pressures is relatively well established (Grande, 1995; Moravcsik 1994; Dyson and
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Featherstone, 1996). Here, an external constraint can provide politicians, technocrats
and/or ‘policy entrepreneurs’ with leverage over the reform process to overcome otherwise
insurmountable domestic opposition and achieve objectives compatible with EU
membership or initiatives, where it is generally accepted that the national interest is in
being at the core of the integration process. Earlier, the advantage in domestic policy
discipline of member states ‘tying their hands’ in the ERM was recognised by economists
(Giavazzi and Pagano, 1988).
EU leverage also arises from the ‘conditionality’ that is offered to prospective new member
states, as hypothesized in the cases of its 2004 enlargement by Schimmelfennig and
Sedelmeier (2004; cf. Hughes, Sasse and Gordon,2004). They posit different models under
which EU states adopt EU ‘rules’. Their first is an ‘external incentives model of governance’,
a rationalist bargaining model in which the domestic actors involved are assumed to be
strategic utility-maximizers interested in the maximization of their own power and welfare
(Schimmelfennig and Sedelmeier, 2004: 663). As such, it follows a standard ‘logic of
consequences’ (March and Olsen, 1989) in which the EU maintains a strategy of
reinforcement by reward and the hypothesis is:
that a state adopts EU rules if the benefits of EU rewards exceed the domestic
adoption costs. In turn, this cost–benefit balance depends on (i) the determinacy of
conditions, (ii) the size and speed of rewards, (iii) the credibility of threats and
promises, and (iv) the size of adoption costs (Schimmelfennig and Sedelmeier, 2004:
664).
As in the case of central Europe, we are concerned with an asymmetrical power relationship
and with a form of ‘active’ leverage in an EU-driven process of (formal) rule adoption at the
domestic level (Vachudova, 2005). The empirical analysis of the Greek case will assess how
far this model can explain the outcomes in Athens.
An alternative explanation of a state’s reaction to EU conditionality follows a ‘logic of
appropriateness’ that emphasises the values, norms, and identities in a particular setting
that structure actors’ responses, as in social constructivism. Schimmelfennig and
Sedelmeier (2005) posit two alternative models that can be seen as generally following this
logic: ‘social learning’ and ‘lesson-drawing’. The former involves the hypothesis that: a
government adopts EU rules if it is persuaded of their appropriateness. The EU’s ability to
persuade will rest on the legitimacy of those rules (whether they are seen as equitable;
whether they are simply imposed or whether they are the outcome of a deliberative process
that takes into account special needs; and, whether they are consistent with an
international consensus); whether (continued) EU membership is favoured; and, whether
the rules resonate (they are seen to equate to good policy and process; they do not conflict
with domestic rules that enjoy high legitimacy). A sense of ownership (of the rules) on the
part of domestic elites is seen as crucial to adaptation (Drazen, 2002; Haughton, 2007).
Thus, Turkey’s PM Erdogan in 2006 re-labelled the EU’s conditions for his country’s
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accession as the ‘Ankara criteria’ proclaiming they were in the national interest anyway
(Cengiz and Hoffmann, 2013).
For its part, ‘lesson-drawing’ posits that a government adopts EU rules if it expects these
rules to solve domestic policy problems effectively. A sense of domestic policy failure and an
orientation to look for solutions via the EU may lead to the judgement that EU rules are
transferable to their own domestic setting. This sense of transferability will be higher if
there are seen to be substitutable resources available domestically for their implementation
and if the rules are compatible with the national discourse. A sense of crisis is frequently
cited as a causal factor that may instigate domestic change (Boin, A. et al, 2005). ‘You never
want a serious crisis to go to waste’ is a contemporary aphorism attributed to Rahm
Emanuel, President Obama’s Chief of Staff in 2008 (Wall Street Journal, 21.12.08). An
interesting comparison is that, at ‘the beginning of the 1990s, when the entire Italian
political system was going through a period of severe crisis, the administrative reform
failures of previous years were replaced by a permanent cycle of reform introduced, above
all, by the governments led by Amato and Ciampi (1992–94) and by the centre-left coalitions
(1996–2001) (Capano, 2003: 787; see also Radaelli and Franchino, 2004; Ongaro and Valotti,
2008). Indeed, ‘few parts of the public sphere remained unaffected’ (Capano, 2003: 781).
The triggers for action could be identified as crises and political contingencies.
The ‘logic of appropriateness’ inherent in the last two models focusses attention on the
compatibility of norms and values across the EU and the domestic levels: a condition that
underscores ‘resonance’ and ‘transferability’ in the Schimmelfennig and Sedelmeier model
and is also consistent with wider notions of ‘misfit’ in the literature on Europeanisation (e.g.
Mastenbroek and Kaeding 2006; Héritier 1995). In the case examined here, the notion of an
‘administrative tradition’ and its durability in the face of new challenges is of direct
relevance. A national administrative tradition involves the ‘historically based set of values,
structures and relationships with other institutions that defines the nature of appropriate
public administration within society’ (Peters, 2008: 118). In the case of the Greek state, its
administrative tradition is typically identified as being strong and deep-rooted. It is largely
consistent with the southern European pattern, displaying the influence of the Napoleonic
model, with a legal formalism (administrative law): hierarchical, centralist (though there has
been recent decentralisation to a degree via the ‘Kallikrates’ reform), and a stress on
procedural regulation rather than innovation (e.g. Spanou, 2008). Administrative actions
depend on the imperative of the ‘Minister’s signature’, for example (Flogaitis, 1987). The
legal formalism means that ”Permanent civil servants are transformed into mere observers
of the policy process without a direct stake in it” (Dimitrakopoulos, 2001: 607). The
administrative culture thus defines what is regarded as ‘rational’, following a logic of
appropriateness, and this has proved a barrier to change. At the same time, the prevailing
political culture has been marked by clientelism and rent-seeking behaviour, with some
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corruption and this can constrain the will to reform (Sotiropoulos, 2001; Featherstone and
Papadimitriou, 2008). These traits are both drawn from wider society and promoted within
it by the state itself, with one feeding on the other (Rothstein and Stolle, 2008).
The reform agenda pressed by the Troika and the prevailing administrative paradigm in
Greece can thus be assessed in terms of the mutual compatibility of their content. Changes
to administrative traditions may also be assessed in relation to prevailing models or
paradigms to assess the degree of change and shifts of direction. Since the 1990s,
internationally, administrative reforms are identified as having followed the precepts of
‘New Public Management’ (NPM) or the ‘Neo-Weberian State’ (NWS). NPM, has been
highly influential in the USA and UK, and it involves a ‘bundle’ of measures, notably a
greater emphasis on performance (and targets); the use of contract providers; ‘total quality
management’; and, service-users being seen as ‘customers’ (Pollitt and Bouckaert, 2011:
10).
The NWS model reaffirms ‘the role of the state as the main facilitator of solutions’ and the
role of administrative law (‘modernised’ as needed) in preserving ‘the citizen-state
relationship’; and, ‘the preservation of the idea of a public service with a distinctive status,
culture, and… terms and conditions’ (Pollitt and Bouckaert, 2011: 118). The ‘neo’ elements
involve a shift from ‘bureaucratic rule-following’ towards a more ‘external orientation’ of
‘meeting citizens’ needs and wishes’ on the basis, not in the main of market mechanisms,
but of ‘a professional culture of quality and service’ (Pollitt and Bouckaert, 2011: 118-119).
Administrative traditions are often seen as being resilient, establishing a path-dependency
to reform. Notably, Pollitt and Bouckaert (2011: 124, 208) find evidence that the
‘trajectories’ of administrative reform across their sample of countries is largely within
‘type’.
In order to explore the relevance of the three models posited by Schimmelfennig and
Sedelmeier, empirical data has been compiled and is examined here both on the aggregate
levels of reform and on the types of reform. An increase in reform activity would suggest
the impact of EU incentives to trigger domestic adaptation. The quantitative data will be
extended by a survey of statements of key domestic actors on the incentives, the credibility
of threats and the costs of adaptation to assess the reactions to the external conditionality.
The domestic response may or may not indicate a compatibility of norms and policy models
between the EU and Greece, however. Thus, the content of the reforms pressed by the
Troika and enacted by Greece will be examined, as will those reforms initiated separately by
Greece. A similarity of externally-imposed and domestically-driven agendas would signal a
consistency of norms and preferences (their ‘appropriateness’), if not also of model. A
bifurcation would suggest a clash in these same respects. This quantitative data will again
be extended – by a short survey of key reform areas and statements by relevant actors to
gauge assessments of the perceived legitimacy of the rules; the domestic resonance of the
rules; and the favourability of EU membership, as a basis for ‘social learning’; and whether
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there is a relevant sense of domestic policy failure; a search for solutions via the EU; and a
belief that EU policies can be transferred readily into the domestic setting, as the foundation
for ‘lesson drawing’.
The number and scope of administrative reforms is, of course, huge for empirical analysis. A
first set of data analysed here includes all the ‘Laws, Presidential Decrees, Ministerial
Decisions, Common Ministerial Decisions and decisions of other institutions relating to the
Public Administration and the Civil Servant’, as listed on the website of the Ministry for
Administrative Reform and e-Governance in Greece. From this listing, all items involving
administrative changes across a range of categories were selected for the period 2007-131.
The data covers those actions affecting the central government administration and not the
wider public sector or local government. In the comparative literature, the typology of
Pollitt and Bouckaert (2011: 77) has gained wide currency. We prefer the slight variation of
Ongaro (2009), in which he defines the types over four categories: financial management;
audit and performance management; personnel; and, organization. In order to capture
some of the specifics of the Memoranda period, we have added a further category of ‘Joint
Actions with the EU Commission’. Thus, the reform actions have been designated according
to the categories outlined here in Table 1. The categorisation of actions is consistent
throughout, mitigating concerns about the types of action across the typology and their
legal form: there is no reason to assume action in one category was more likely to require a
legal output before or after the arrival of the ‘Troika’. Charting the number of such actions
is a somewhat crude measure: no account is made here for variations between the reform
items in terms of their scope and significance2. Adjustments have had to be made (see
Figure 1 Note). Nevertheless the data are a useful first step in assessing the impact of
external conditionality on the aggregate levels and range of domestic actions. Further
assessments will be made by reference to the qualitative evidence.
[Table 1: A typology of Administrative Reforms around here]
DATA ANALYSIS
1 The selection and categorisation was undertaken by two researchers independently, with differences
reconciled. 2 In the 2010-13 period, for example, a number of major reforms were initiated: the ‘Kallikrates’ reform of
regional government (this is not covered here); the ‘Diavgia’, the online transparency of all administrative decisions (categorised as audit and performance here); the ‘Diathesimotita’ (compulsory firings of public servants) and ‘Kinitikotita’ (the mobility or transfer of civil servants), both of which are categorised here under ‘personnel’.
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[Figure 1: The total number of administrative reform actions in Greece, 2007-13. About here]
Figure 1 shows the overall trend in administrative reform actions from 2007-13 as recorded
by the Greek Ministry. The resultant graph shows a relatively low and stable level of
activity in the pre-crisis period up to 2009. A major increase then occurs in the number of
such actions in 2010, following the election of a new government – with George Papandreou
as Prime Minister – in October 2009 and the onset of the bailout ‘Memorandum of
Understanding’ (MoU) with its list of reform items in May 2010. Indeed, the trend
continues upward thereafter such that by 2012 there has been more than a fivefold
increase. In relation to the conceptual frame outlined earlier, the trend offers confirmation
of the effects of external conditionality at an aggregate level.
But this is a limited overall measure. Beyond a simple upward trend, it is useful to delve
into the nature and content of the reforms. Figure 2 differentiates the reform actions by
subject type, following the Ongaro typology, for the 2007-9 pre-crisis period. It is striking
that the number of actions concerned with financial management and audit and
performance are the lowest types. Indeed, the ratio of financial management/audit and
performance to personnel and organisational matters is less than 1:3. Most activity stayed
seemingly with the existing operational mode, rather than being concerned with the
effectiveness of public spending or the evaluation of performance. The ‘skewness’ suggests
a detachment or insularity of the state administration from concerns of delivery or service
(as in the NPM model) or indeed with financial discipline. Without a crisis, there had been
limited pressure to change the administrative paradigm from a relatively set path: one that
was compatible with the clientelistic favours and rent-seeking demands of Greek politics
(Mitsopoulos and Pelagidis, 2011).
[Figure 2: Greek Ministry Data - Administrative Reforms in Greece pre-MoU by subject
category – about here]
With the bail-outs, came the pressures of loan conditionality and the specification of
reforms, including administrative changes (European Economy, May 2010). In order to
place the latter in an overall perspective, it can be noted that the administrative measures
represented approximately 40% [282] of the total number of reforms required of Greece
under the terms of the two bail-out ‘Memoranda of Understanding’ (MoU) (706). Clearly,
there was the recognition that reforming the Greek state administration would be crucial to
the ability of the country to adapt to the requirements of the euro-zone.
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Figure 3 comprises another set of data - compiled from the regular reports of the Troika
between 2010-13. This shows the aggregate levels of administrative reform actions
required by the MoUs and judged by the Troika to have been implemented. The reform
actions have again been categorised as indicated earlier. The graph shows a modest
progression in the items listed, with a dramatic rise in 2012-13. More particularly, the focus
of the reforms shows a major shift from the pre-existing domestic pattern detailed above.
Measures concerned with the audit and performance of the public administration now
loomed large on the Troika’s radar; indeed, the list of required reforms here was three times
the level sustained before their arrival. A further major difference was the attention given
to financial management, which became a very prominent concern (consistently in the top
3). Performance and delivery, as well as budget discipline, were of central concern to
Greece’s creditors and the differences in the patterns of reform actions are indicative of
contrasting (external and domestic) agendas.
[Figure 3: TROIKA REPORTS - Administrative Reforms in Greece post-MoU (2010-13) by
subject category – about here]
This shift of emphasis can be contrasted with the pattern of administrative reform initiated
by the Greek government itself in the same period of 2010-12. Figure 4 categorises the total
number of reforms enacted by the Athens government, again using the Ministry’s own data.
Set against those elaborated by the Troika, there is a striking lack of emphasis on an audit
and performance agenda. Indeed, the relative attention given to it is miniscule by
comparison. This is not a matter of the Troika’s agenda being accomplished and therefore
the Greek government could ‘move on’: in the same period, the Troika was lamenting the
lack of domestic progress. Instead, the administration remained reluctant to engage in self-
reflection or wider evaluation; the indigenous agenda had barely changed in this respect.
Organisational items remained the primary agenda, though personnel matters were now
given far less attention than before. There is, however, a new stress on financial
management reforms, which is the second biggest category of all.
[Figure 4: GREEK MINISTRY DATA on Administrative Reforms of Greek Government by type,
2010-12. – about here]
In sum, the data signals a number of important features. Firstly, the overall level of activity
concerned with administrative reform shows a huge increase after the onset of the first bail-
out. Thus, the trend is strongly consistent with the conditionality hypothesis. Secondly,
there is a significant change of emphasis from one period to the next and there are notable
contrasts of priority between the Troika and the Greek government in terms of the focus
and content of reform. Most notably, the external creditors stress the need for new audit
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and performance measures, while this is a very low area of activity for the Greek
government itself. Indeed, it is actually a lesser activity than in the pre-crisis period. The
disparity suggests contrasting norms, perhaps also of models. That said, the Greek
government’s reforms show a much stronger focus than before on matters of financial
management, a priority stressed by the Troika.
SHIFTING THE MODEL?
Over the course of two agenda-setting memoranda and eight follow-up reviews (to May
2013), successive Greek governments had been obliged to agree to a very specific listing of
what administrative reforms were required to satisfy the terms of its bail-out loans. These
became the yardstick by which to judge domestic adaptation. In sum, the most important
entailed:
1. The need to increase operational efficiency; enhance the quality of available data;
the better use of IT; and more effective coordination between state organizations.
2. The strengthening of the autonomy of key parts of the administration from political
manipulation and from corruption (e.g. in the tax revenue administration).
3. The shedding of posts, the introduction of performance management, and the
development of a human resources strategy.
4. The review of current state provisions in certain key areas with the purpose of
evaluating performance outcomes in relation to resource commitments.
5. The opening-up of the administration to external review and technical advice and
support (Economic Adjustment Programmes for Greece, 2010-13).
All but perhaps the first had the potential to shift the administrative model of the Greek
state, though the destination was not explicitly defined in a single, coherent form.
The immediate priority in Athens was for increased efficiency and effectiveness in budget
management and this meant new ways of tackling endemic problems. The OECD estimated
the total tax collected could increase: ‘if Greece could collect VAT, social security
contributions and corporate income tax with the same efficiency as its main partners do, it
could boost tax revenues by about 4.5 per cent per year’ (OECD 2011: 85, cited by
Zahariadis, 2013). At first, reform and improvement proved limited and slow. A new
General Secretariat for Public Revenue Administration was created to administer all direct
taxation. In February 2011, the EU Commission noted the poor quality of data available to
the Greek government: ‘monthly data availability for the government entities other than the
state remains clearly below par and prevents adequate monitoring of intra-year budgetary
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developments for the government as a whole’ (European Economy, February 2011: 22).
The introduction of new IT tools in all tax offices was instigated, overcoming antiquated
practices, rigidities and streamlining the system.
But increasing effectiveness also meant creating greater protection against political
interference and the corruption of officials, features endemic to the Greek ‘model’. Tax
evasion by ‘high wealth’ individuals and large taxpayers – an administrative lacuna exposed
by the public reaction to the tough austerity measures - was to be tackled by the creation of
new specialised organisational units. Anti-corruption procedures in tax collection were
strengthened; new protocols (‘Codes’) on tax procedures were established (addressing
endemic problems of exemptions and discretion); cash payments in tax offices were to be
abolished; and tax collection would be administered only in the largest tax offices (European
Economy, May 2013). These efficiency savings provoked the militant reaction of the tax
officials: fearing jobs being threatened, but also perhaps their informal ‘perks’. The
dysfunctionalities of the tax administration represented a major challenge. In the first half
of 2013, the recouping of old tax debts had increased by 34% on the previous year
(Kathimerini, 2.8.13), though overall tax revenue collection still remained below target. At
this point, over a third of the €60 billion of tax debt was in the form of fines for violating
corporate tax regulations and their settlement was seen as highly unlikely. The number of
tax auditors employed remained woefully inadequate and the level of audits carried out
remained well below target. The Troika lamented that staff needed to be reoriented
towards priorities, such as the large debtors and the large taxpayer units, and a ‘huge effort’
was still needed in 2013 to make the administration fit for purpose (European Economy,
May 2013: 30-31).
The part of the reform agenda that was most challenging to the established administrative
model was that involving a change of personnel policy and practice. The Troika sought a
‘comprehensive human resources strategy’ within the Greek administration – signalling that
none existed previously – covering ‘the selection process to the hiring and allocation,
evaluation, training, disciplinary procedures and the roles of the senior managers’
(European Economy, May 2013:34). The Troika also required Greece to embark on ‘the
assessment of personnel competences and performance’ across the state administration
(European Economy, May 2013:34). By May 2013, progress had been ‘very limited’,
however: rather optimistically, the Troika expected completion by the end of the year.
‘Performance management’ is an alien concept to the Napoleonic tradition. It confronted a
system of accountability that is formal and legalistic, with controls often applied ex ante -
limiting the scope for managerial decision (Peters, 2008: 129; Dimitrakopoulos, 2001: 607).
Further, the insistence that Greece should reduce the total staffing levels of the state
administration became a highly-charged issue of confrontation with Athens from March
2011 onwards. The dismissal of public servants was challenged on the basis that they were
protected by the Greek Constitution. The severity of the targets could also be opposed as
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they would be deleterious to a shift of management practice. As the then Minister of
Administrative Reform, Antonis Manitakis, of the DIMAR party, commented:
Any discussion about dismissals creates absurd fears for everyone, even to the
capable servants, paralyses and undermines any announcement for reform and
cancels the procedures for [staff] evaluations. Therefore, it works as an excuse not to
do anything, everything to stay as it is and urges the administration to paralysis
(Kathimerini, 2.4.2013).
Similarly, the public servants’ union (ADEDY) refrained from defending the existing Greek
‘model’, but rather focussed on the ‘incrimination’ of public servants via the new staff exit
schemes and the ‘disorienting exploitation’ they entailed (adedy.gr; 20.3.12). It’s President,
Kostas Tsikrikas, demanded that:
This story has to end. Civil servants in Greece constitute 8% of the workforce, while
in other EU member states the average is between 15 and 17% (TO BHMA,
11.7.2012).
Opposition leader, Alexis Tsipras, did widen the focus, though, to defend an important
electoral constituency and to reject the need for foreign intervention:
SYRIZA will trust the officials of the public administration. We don’t need a
Taskforce to show us what to do. There are opportunities, if there is a sufficient
political will for a public sector based on meritocracy and skilled officers in the public
administration (TO BHMA, 7.6.2012).
The issue of the staffing reductions confused that of re-modelling the administration: with a
war of attrition on the former, the focus on the latter was obscured and could be resisted as
being ‘foreign’.
The Greek government proved unable to deliver the ‘down-sizing’ that it promised the
Troika. Repeatedly the Troika left Athens unsatisfied and not prepared to sanction the next
loan instalment. This was followed in June 2013 by the Coalition taking precipitous action
(e.g. the closing of the state broadcasting corporation, ERT) and the exit from the
government of the leftist DIMAR party. In reality, the issue had a much longer history with
EU pressure on Greece to reduce posts in the public administration not only pre-dating the
debt crisis but also Greece’s entry into the euro (Featherstone, 1994: 283). The issue and
the domestic political constraints remained essentially the same: target reductions
conflicted with political interests, but also challenged the established administrative model.
The first Greek loan Memorandum set a target of Greece shedding 150,000 posts between
2011-15 and by the end of 2012 almost 80,000 had been lost by an application of a 1:5
replacement rule and many early retirements (European Economy, May 2013). A so-called
‘mobility scheme’ had been created in 2011 (Article 5 of Law 4024), under Minister Dimitris
Page 17 of 32
Reppas, which had led to a crude shedding of staff by the imposition of an age criterion and
this, together with staff volunteering for early retirement, led to the loss of many of those
with skills and experience at a time when the Troika spoke of the need for an upgrading of
such. In 2012, this scheme was now revised and reactivated: a number of staff would be
placed on a reserve list for one year at 75% of their salary and if no new public post was
found for them in that period they would be fired. Some 2,000 employees were transferred
to this mobility scheme by November 2012 and, after political delays, the government
edged towards the target of 25,000 by the end of 2013 (Kathimerini, 2.8.13). The Greek
government was also pressed to identify staff for ‘mandatory exits’ from the public
administration on the basis of a functional review of the entire central government and its
local offices – an exercise that in itself represented a major systemic challenge and one that
was delayed but still scheduled for completion in 2013. A target of 15,000 mandatory exits
by the end of 2014 was set by the Troika (Kathimerini, 28.2.2014).
Though the external narrative involved systematic review, the actual domestic response
appeared one of short-term improvisation with the risk of poor or incomplete
implementation high. In 2012, for example, a review of publicly-funded research centres
was effectively shelved as the Ministry of Education felt the pressure to make early financial
savings and implemented a quick-fix reorganisation (Financial Times, 18.10.2011). On public
servant posts, only later was the loan strategy refined to encompass a ‘more targeted
approach’ in order to ‘rejuvenate’ and ‘upgrade’ the ‘human capital, skills and performance
in the public administration’ (European Economy, May 2013: 33); in other words, to focus
on the model, its needs and optimum resource deployment. A derogation from the 1:5 rule
was introduced to allow hiring in priority areas like tax administration on a new 1:1 ratio
with mandatory exits.
Alongside these specific areas was also the more general concern with how the government
administration was structured and operated. The OECD produced a comprehensive report
on the Greek administration that year, which included searing indictments of systemic
failures and functional weaknesses (OECD, 2011). External technical assistance in specific
functional areas was already being provided by the EU Commission, individual EU member
states (notably France and Germany), the IMF, the World Bank and others. The Troika then
moved in 2012 to say that ‘the Government has to: i) set up a high-level transformation
steering group, chaired by the PM, that will supervise, monitor and ensure the
implementation of administrative reforms; [February 2012] ii) establish a stable structure
for Inter-Ministerial Coordination; [May 2012] iii) create basic horizontal structures in
each Ministry, implementing the relevant procedures with Budget/Finance [February
2012], Audit, Internal Control, Human Resource Management, acting under common rules’
(European Economy, March 2012). A new law announced in April 2013, consistent with
these objectives, envisaged streamlining the number of ministries (from 18 to 14) and one
secretariat general, a re-structuring that would also facilitate the shedding of staff.
Page 18 of 32
The EU had never before been involved in the organisational re-structuring of one of its
national governments, from the very centre outwards.
CONCLUSIONS
The present study has evaluated the impact of the external conditionality strategy on
Greece and the reform of its state administration.
At a basic level, the data collated here showed that the aggregate level of administrative
reform activity greatly increased after the onset of the first bail-out, reflective of a
generalised will that Greece should remain in the EU’s core. Yet, delving into the range and
content of the reform actions revealed blockages and differences of agendas. The
‘incentives model’ was undermined by the perceptions of high adaptation costs with union
resistance able to refer to constitutional constraints against public sector lay-offs.
Moreover, with a state machine deficient in its ability to deliver targeted measures on a set
of priorities and according to an agreed schedule, solutions were found in horizontal cuts in
public expenditure (salaries; pensions; jobs, etc.) that further re-calibrated the pay-offs for
political actors. More found solace in the calculation that EU leaders lacked the will and/or
capability to force Greece out of the euro-zone and signs of the EU softening its stance were
seized on. This was consistent with actors ignoring incredible threats and being prepared to
gamble (Hargreaves-Heap and Varoufakis 1995). It contrasted with the pre-accession states
of central Europe before 2004: they had more time for administrative reform and the
incentive to adapt was linked to a futuristic vision, not to uncertain fiscal outcomes amidst
severe austerity. Conditionality on administrative reform in central Europe was effective
from the strategic constraint, more than from ‘social learning’ (Dimitrova, 2005: 90).
Beyond the ‘incentives model’ in the Greek case, further analysis showed the divergences of
external and domestic policy agendas. A crucial part of the adaptation problem was cultural
or ideational (‘social learning’). This is an administrative setting that struggles to self-reflect,
that has not prioritised norms of service delivery and of evaluation. As in other,
international cases of external intervention the sense of ‘ownership’ has been a key,
intervening variable determining outcomes (Drazen, 2002 ; Haughton, 2007). Greece’s
creditors heard conflicting messages. The then Minister for Administrative Reform, Dimitris
Reppas, spoke in 2011 of the need to ‘cooperate with the Task Force and other countries
that will support us’ (Kathimerini, 29.12.2011), but the terms of the engagement were
disputed domestically and they prevented ‘ownership’.
The conditionality strategy was de-legitimised by a sense of the reforms being imposed: a
forced adjustment. In turn, Greek governments suffered their own loss of legitimacy, as
they appeared weak in the face of the foreigners’ ‘blackmail’. An ‘alien’ agenda and
compromised agency contrasted with more effective engagement and the alternative of
Page 19 of 32
empowering a domestic reform coalition, favoured over its opponents. The latter would be
more compatible with the longer horizons and the detailed technical assistance of the EU’s
Taskforce, as opposed to the immediacy of the Troika’s priorities following the IMF’s
practice of fiscal rescues.
What underscored the Troika agenda was a clear assumption of the failure of current Greek
practices, a dismissal of the model and its rationality. This in itself created a provocation to
those actors within the system. It was not until the passage of much more time – and a
crucial change of leadership at the head of the Ministry of Administrative Reform in June
2013 – that domestic buy-in to the content of the reforms and ‘lesson-drawing’ gained some
salience. Previous ministers had been seen as ‘dragging their feet’ or obfuscating on
staffing reductions and re-modelling. In April 2014, the Troika reported significantly greater
progress: reforms were on track to achieve 150,000 fewer government officials in post by
the end of 2015; and targets for the mobility scheme and mandatory exits had been
achieved. More generally, the government had adopted a new two-year administrative
reform action plan, encompassing a comprehensive human resources strategy. Yet, ‘very
substantial improvements in public administration [were] still needed’ in order to enhance
quality and efficiency and this would require the shifting of personnel, performance
evaluations, better financial management, the simplification of rules, and the reduction of
the scope for corruption (European Economy, April 2014: 3).
The extent to which the crisis has prompted a paradigmatic shift in administrative reform
remained ambiguous; it appeared more in the realm of middle-level policy change (Ladi,
2012: 28). It was not a decisive break with the established, Napoleonic state tradition. A
number of the reforms being pressed on Greece were consistent with the New Public
Management agenda: performance management and incentives; public service contracts;
and the new emphasis on the audit and delivery of public services. These were problematic
areas for implementation. Moreover, the ‘model’ urged by the Troika and the Taskforce
was not easily identifiable with Anglo-Saxon NPM alone; continental advisers could
recognise elements of NWS also. The absence of a single model for the EU’s conditionality
agenda is consistent with what was found earlier in the case of central Europe (Grabbe,
2006; Dimitrova, 2005).
The case highlights important strategic issues for the EU: how effective can it be in reaching
into robust domestic settings to lever institutional reform? Can or should the EU impose a
preferred policy model? The EU risks a political backlash, a loss of legitimacy, and a threat to
its own credibility. If the EU fails to elicit the necessary substantive reform, what are the
consequences for its ability to coordinate macro-economic performance across an
heterogeneous euro-zone? This is the implicit challenge that has loomed for the EU since it
embarked on the single market and the single currency. The Greek crisis has exposed the
EU’s vulnerability in these respects and it is not yet clear that the challenge is being
overcome.
Page 21 of 32
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I am very grateful to Angelos Theodorakopoulos and Georgios Moschopoulos for their
assistance in collating the data and to Dimitris Sourvanos for searches and editing; to those
who read and commented on earlier drafts of this paper: Dimitis Papadimitriou
(Manchester), Vassilis Monastiriotis and Uli Sedelmeier (LSE), and Dimitris Sotiropoulos and
Calliope Spanou (Athens); and, to the anonymous reviewers of this journal. Any errors
remain mine alone.
Page 22 of 32
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TABLES
Table 1: A typology of Administrative Reforms
Components of reform Scope and components
Financial management Content of formulation of budget; accounting
systems.
Audit and performance Actors, forms and procedures of auditing
public sector organizations; performance
management information and its use
Personnel Status, norms, rules of civil service;
recruitment, promotion, rewards;
appointment and decision powers of
managers; personnel and management.
Organization Modalities of specialization; coordination;
decentralization; organizational design
Joint actions with EU Commission Joint missions and assessments; supply of
information to EU; development of reform
plans in conjunction with EU experts.
Source: adapted from Ongaro, 2009: 66-70
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Figures
Figure 1: Greek Ministry Data - the total number of administrative reform actions in
Greece, 2007-13.
Source: data from the website of the Ministry of Administrative Reform and e-Governance, Greece, collated by LSE Hellenic Observatory; see: http://www.gspa.gr/%289104060759513298%29/eCPortal.asp?id=6506&nt=19&lang=1&pID=6488&lang=1&lang=1 Note: Here, we have excluded personnel and organisational items affecting staff, for example, in the fire and
police services, hospitals, schools, and the armed forces and all the accompanying ministerial and joint
ministerial decisions. These items are either distant from our focus on the core state administration and/or often
concerned with very minor measures.
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
Page 30 of 32
Figure 2: Greek Ministry Data - Administrative Reforms in Greece pre-
MoU by subject category
Source: as for Figure 1, with the data differentiated according to the typology of Ongaro (2009).
Page 31 of 32
Figure 3: TROIKA REPORTS - Administrative Reforms in Greece post-MoU (2010-13) by
subject category
Source: The data here is taken from the reports of the ‘Troika’, differentiated according to the typology of
Ongaro (2009).